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72

NEWFOUNDLAND.

O rugged land!
Land of the rock moss!
Land whose drear barrens it is woe to cross!
Thou rough thing from God's hand!
O stormy land!
Land where the tempests roar!
Land where the unbroken waves rave mad upon the shore:
Thine outwalls scarce withstand!
O wintry realm,
Where the cold north winds blow;
Where drifting, bitter sleet, and blinding snow
All man's poor work o'erwhelm!
O bleak, bleak realm,
Whose homeward-hastening bark
Is crisped with ice: sails, cordage, stiff and stark,
And iced the unruly helm!
What hast thou in thy gift?
The kindly sun has shone,
These thousand years, the stubborn cliffs upon

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Which thou on high dost lift:
What hast thou in thy gift?
A stinted growth appears:
Grass, shrub, and tree, slow-growing in long years,
Where gapes the rocky rift.
Yet thou art good:
Thy barrens feed the deer;
And birds of other lands do summer here,
In thy lone humble wood.
Ay, thou art good;
The poor man at his door
Gathers his fuel; and year-long thy shore
Yields, in free gift, his food.
And better, still:
Beneath a guardian-crown
The poor man freely walks and lays him down,
Free in all things but ill:
And better, still:
Here Holy Faith hath come,
Teaching that God will give a glorious home
To those that do His will.
January 9, 1847.